There is a classic scene in American cinema where the family gathers around the fireplace to burn their mortgage papers. It’s a moment of triumph, a symbol of freedom. But in the world of sophisticated wealth management, that fire is doing more than just destroying a debt—it’s incinerating your liquidity and your tax alpha.
As the Talking Heads once sang:
“Watch out, you might get what you’re after… Burning down the house!“
On the face of it, paying off your mortgage feels like a “safe” move. But unless you are operating under the rarest of circumstances, it’s rarely a wise one. Most of the time, it’s simply a Stupid Investment Trick. Here is why you should keep the bank as your roommate for as long as possible.
1. The Amortization Trap
By the time you reach the final years of a 30-year mortgage, the bank has already won. At a 5% interest rate, a $250k mortgage results in a final year where you’re paying roughly $19,119 in total payments—but only $502 of that is interest.
The bank has front-loaded their profit. In these final years, you are building equity with surgical efficiency. To pay it off early now is like leaving a movie five minutes before the happy ending; you’ve already paid for the ticket and sat through the trailers, you might as well enjoy the credits.
2. The Tax Man Always Rings Twice
Your mortgage is one of the last great “subsidies” from the federal government. If you’re in the 22% tax bracket, that first-year interest of $15,933 nets you a $3,500 tax deduction. When you “burn the mortgage,” you don’t just lose that deduction; you often create a “Double Whammy.” Where is the payoff money coming from? If you’re liquidating stocks to find that cash, you’re likely triggering Capital Gains taxes. You are effectively paying the IRS a “liquidation fee” for the privilege of losing a tax deduction. That’s not a strategy; that’s an unforced error.
3. The Retirement Liquidity Crisis
In retirement, Cash is King, but Liquidity is the Kingdom. A paid-off home is a massive, immobile block of wealth. You can’t use a brick to pay for a new roof, a medical emergency, or a sudden trip to see the grandkids.
As the song goes:
“I’m in a Long and Winding Road… that leads to your door.”
If that road leads to a door you own outright but an empty bank account, you’ve traded options for “feelings.” When a crisis hits, your only choice is to borrow against that equity. But if interest rates have climbed in the meantime, you’ll be taking out a new loan at a higher rate than the one you just killed.
The Bottom Line
Being “out of debt” feels good, but being “out of cash” feels much worse. Real estate taxes and insurance premiums are “forever” bills—they never go away. Keeping your mortgage allows you to keep your cash working in the market, maintain your tax advantages, and stay liquid enough to solve problems when they inevitably arise.
Don’t let an emotional milestone become a “Stupid Investment Trick.” Keep the mortgage. Keep the options. Keep the cash.
